Audi heads into Bahrain winner's circle

Audi returned to the FIA World Endurance Championship winner's circle in Bahrain as Andre Lotterer, Benoit Treluyer and Marcel Fassler claimed victory to increase their lead at the head of the title race.

The two-time Le Mans-winning trio led home an Audi one-two after six hours of racing on the Bahrain International Circuit. They triumphed by nearly two laps over the sister R18 e-tron quattro shared by Allan McNish and Tom Kristensen, which lost time with overheating rear brakes and then two changes of nose section when one of the headlights failed.

Toyota's aspirations of a second consecutive WEC win were derailed by an electrical glitch. The illuminated race number panels on the side of the car had failed on the TS030 HYBRID and the Toyota Motorsport GmbH squad were forced to change it with the loss of more than seven minutes.

The Toyota had led the race in the hands of Alex Wurz and Nicolas Lapierre from seven laps into the opening stint. The car was holding a lead of approximately 20s early in the third hours when the team was forced to effect repairs to the number panels.

Lapierre and then Wurz were able to bring the car back into third place ahead of the LMP1 privateers before the former tangled with the Strakka Racing HPD driven by Jonny Kane, damaged his suspension and had to abandon the car out on track.

The Strakka HPD, in which Kane was joined by Danny Watts and Nick Leventis, ended up third after the Toyota's retirement. It triumphed in the unofficial LMP1 privateer class after the Rebellion Racing Lola-Toyota B12/60 shared by Neel Jani and Nicolas Prost lost two laps when it had to change one of its race numbers.

A closely-fought LMP2 battle went to the AF Corse-run Pecom team. Its ORECA-Nissan 03 shared by Pierre Kaffer, Nicolas Minassian and Luis Perez Companc was in contention for the whole race but looked set to lose out to the Starworks HPD until Stephane Sarrazin was unable to restart the car at its final pitstop.

AF Corse Ferrari team sealed the GTE manufacturers' and and GTE Pro teams' titles with its fourth consecutive victory . Giancarlo Fisichella and Toni Vilander, who replaced Gianmaria Bruni for this event, looked set to battle with the solo factory Aston Martin Vantage GTE shared by Darren Turner and Stefan Mucke until an exhaust problem lost the British car time.

The Aston remained within striking distance until the one safety car period of the race when misfortune resulted in it dropping more than a minute behind.